Skip to main content

Python module which can convert an extensive number of ways to represent time with strings to datetime objects

Project description

Python module which can convert an extensive number of ways to represent time with strings to datetime objects

Some examples include:

“Tomorrow 5:00AM” - for tomorrow at 5am

“+3yr +2d” - For three years and two days in future

“-5mo 16:00” - For 5 months ago at 16:00 hours (4PM)

“1/8/2015” - Depending on monthBeforeDate flag, could be Jan 8th or August 1st, 2015.

The primary function which supports converting all of these various texts is text2datetime.text2datetime

text2datetime method

def text2datetime(timeStr, now=None, monthBeforeDay=True):

timeStr - The text to convert to a datetime.datetime object

now - Defaults to now, but you can calculate relative to a different date if you provide a datetime.datetime here

monthBeforeDay - For relevant formats, True will have the expected format be month-before-day (American format), False will have day before month (European format).

Other Methods

While text2datetime supports interpreting all known forms of date and time strings, there are individual public methods for each form you may also use.

See http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/kata198/text2datetime/blob/master/doc/text2datetime.html for pydoc of all methods.

Supported Formats

Date should be in one of the following forms:

  • Relative Modifiers

    Relative modifiers represent a delta from current time, current date.

    Each modifier starts with a direction (+ or -), then a number, then a unit.

    Example: +3d means ‘3 days from this very second’

    Available modifiers:

    y = years

    yr = years

    mo = months

    d = days

    h = hours

    m = minutes

    s = seconds

    You may use relative modifiers and have a final entry be a fixed time,

    for example “+3d 12:00:00” would be noon three days from now.

  • Fixed String

    One of the following fixed strings:

    “now” - Right now (to the second)

    “today” - Beginning of today (00:00:00)

    “tomorrow” - Beginning of tomorrow

    “yesterday” - Beginning of yesterday

    Can optionally be followed with a time, as hour:minute or hour:minute:second, otherwise midnight (00:00:00) is used. Clock is 24-hour clock, 00=midnight, unless “PM” or “AM” is at the end.

    Example: “tomorrow 5:00PM”

  • ctime format

    Ctime format with optional day of week

    (3-letter-day) [3-letter-month] [2-digit date] [2-hour]:[2-minute]:[2-second] [4-digit Year]

    Example: Wed Jan 28 12:28:13 2015

  • American Date Format

    numeric Month/Day/Year with optional time as hour:minute or hour:minute:second. Clock is a 24-hour clock, 00=midnight, unless “PM” or “AM” is at the end.

    e.x.: 1/28/2015 or 1/28/2015 12:28:13

    This is used when monthBeforeDay=True (default) in text2datetime, getDatetimeFromDateStr when monthBeforeDay=True, and getDatetimeFromAmericanTime

  • European Date Format

    numeric Day/Month/Year with optional time as hour:minute or hour:minute:second. Clock is a 24-hour clock, 00=midnight, unless “PM” or “AM” is at the end.

    e.x.: 28/1/2015 or 28/1/2015 12:28:13

    This is used when monthBeforeDay=False in text2datetime, getDatetimeFromDateStr when monthBeforeDay=False, and getDatetimeFromEuropeanTime

  • Time Only

    time as hour:minute or hour:minute:second will use current date. Clock is a 24 hour clock, 00=midnight, unless “PM” or “AM” is at the end.

NOTES:

Unless AM/PM is specified in formats that support it, hours are in 24-hour clock format, starting with 00=midnight, 23 = 11PM

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

text2datetime-1.0.1.tar.gz (19.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file text2datetime-1.0.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for text2datetime-1.0.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5b826d97ad102106d04fa8324b56806478792cf5d0af98288eff83378d625105
MD5 e02f16180eb079ff1bf9702a02add755
BLAKE2b-256 4536927c0c47dcc9a9aa525a5d009b2948ba7ea1f21ee06a74399f89dbbf82b3

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page